Showing posts with label Messiah's Mandate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Messiah's Mandate. Show all posts

Thursday, January 10, 2019

The Double Meaning Behind This Ancient Prophecy - RON CANTOR Messiah's Mandate CHARISMA NEWS

(Pixabay/Designer-Obst)

Secrets Surrounding the Birth of Messiah, Part 6

There is a prophecy in Jeremiah where Rachel is weeping for her children. It is a strange word in the middle of a prophecy about Israel's restoration. Like so many prophecies (Isa. 7:14; Dan. 9:27, 11:31, 12:11), there was a current fulfillment and a future fulfillment: ""A voice is heard in Ramah, lamentation and bitter weeping, Rachel weeping for her children, refusing to be comforted for her children, because they are no more" (Jer. 31:15).
In Hebrew, Ramah simply means "height," and there are dozens of cities and regions that have Ramah(t) in their names. The most famous of these is the Golan Heights, or in Hebrew, Ramat HaGolan. However, most scholars believe that Jeremiah was referring to an area five miles north of Jerusalem that served as a deportation center as the Jews were being exiled to Babylon. Exile was judgment. God's heart was broken, as, too, was Israel's faithful. We see the pain of exile in this most famous verse from Psalm 137:
By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion. ... Our captors made us sing and our tormentors made us entertain, saying, "Sing us one of the songs of Zion."
How shall we sing the song of the Lord in a foreign land? If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget its skill. If I do not remember you, let my tongue stick to the roof of my mouth, if I do not have Jerusalem as my highest joy (Ps. 137:1-6).
Get Spirit-filled content delivered right to your inbox! Click here to subscribe to our newsletter.
Jeremiah depicts Rachel crying, even weeping, over her children who are taken away into captivity. But Matthew, who knew that Rachel's grave was in Bethlehem, reveals a deeper meaning.
Herod, the murderous king, was searching for the Messiah. He was scared this newborn Israelite king would dethrone him. He did not know that His kingdom was from another realm (John 18:36). Seeing the prophecies that this boy-king would be born in Bethlehem, he "sent forth and killed all the male children who were in Bethlehem and the surrounding region, from two years old and under" (Matt. 2:16a). It was a devastating calamity—known as the Massacre of Innocents. Imagine little Jewish boys being ripped from their mothers' arms and murdered before their eyes.
Rachel is weeping over these children. And, amazingly enough, the name given to the hill overlooking Bethlehem where these children were murdered is Ramat Rachel—the Heights of Rachel. The people, who named it that, made no connection to Matthew's narrative, as they were Jews—not believers in the New Testament, and probably not very religious. They simply knew that Rachel's grave was in the near distance. But those same two words, Ramah(t) and Rachel, are in Jeremiah's prophecy.

The Kingdom Suffers Violence

The entrance of Messiah from heaven to earth was violent. There was war in the heavenlies that resulted in bloodshed on earth. Satan sought to snuff out the life of Yeshua and was merciless in his pursuit. God hid His plan within prophecies that the enemy could not understand. Matthew, who, of all the Gospel writers, is the most familiar with the Hebrew Scriptures, finds the fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy. He sees in Jeremiah 31 that the restoration of Israel is deeply connected to the advent of the New Covenant. "Surely, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah" (Jer. 31:31).
Just a few verses before, he sees Rachel weeping even as the New Covenant comes forth. To the common reader, the passage seems out of place. But, in truth, the violence against these babies is deeply connected to the declaration of a New Covenant.
But Rachel, whose tomb is near the place of Yeshua's birth, is weeping over the slain of Bethlehem, just as she did over the exiles of Israel. We see elements of the Exodus here, which begins with Pharaoh seeking to kill Jewish baby boys. Yeshua escapes to Egypt and then reenacts another part of the Exodus by coming from Egypt to the promised land: "Out of Egypt I called my son "(Hos. 11:1b). Maybe it is better said this way: Moses and the children of Israel were prophetically acting out what their Messiah would do many years later.
Matthew's discovery of the connection between 1) the restoration and Israel (Jer. 31:1-14), 2) Rachel's weeping over the babies in Bethlehem (Jer. 31:15) and the 3) New Covenant advent (Jer. 31:31-33) could only have been through the divine revelation! 
Get Spirit-filled content delivered right to your inbox! Click here to subscribe to our newsletter.
Great Resources to help you excel in 2019! #1 John Eckhardt's "Prayers That..." 6-Book Bundle. Prayer helps you overcome anything life throws at you. Get a FREE Bonus with this bundle. #2 Learn to walk in the fullness of your purpose and destiny by living each day with Holy Spirit. Buy a set of Life in the Spirit, get a second set FREE.

Tuesday, December 25, 2018

The Greatest Gift is the Birth of Yeshua - Ron Cantor MESSIAH'S MANDATE

The greatest gift of all is Yeshua!
We went to Yafo (Jaffa), the oldest port city in the world, a few days ago to record this special teaching on the birth of Yeshua. It is based on the blogs we sent out the other day. If you want to be inspired at the creativity of God in bringing forth the Messiah, then please take some time to watch.

God moved on the heart of an evil emperor to have a census, so that a man living in the Galilee, who was in the line of King David, would return to the town of David, Bethlehem, where in secret, hidden from Herod and Devil himself, a Savior—the Messiah was born. God shared His excitement with a few shepherds, through a breathtaking angelic announcement, who then made their way to the "Tower of the Flock" to see the baby Messiah.
Messiahs Mandate | PO Box 535788Grand Prairie, TX 75053

Monday, December 24, 2018

When was Yeshua Really Born? - Ron Cantor MESSIAH'S MANDATE (Tel Aviv, Israel)

When was Yeshua Really Born?

Ron Cantor —  December 22, 2018 


Secrets Surrounding the Birth of Messiah - Part 5
Incidentally, this is why I believe that Yeshua was not born on December 25th or even in the fall, during the Feast of Tabernacles. Certainly a case can be made for the latter, as He did come to “tabernacle among us”(John 1:14). However, it would have been unwise to call for a census when Jews were traveling to Jerusalem for the feast. Everyone had to return to his or her hometown. The fall holidays point to the second coming of Yeshua, while the spring ones point to His birth, death and resurrection. 
It was in the spring that the Passover lambs were birthed. How do we know? Because the lambs for Passover had to be one-year-old (Ex. 12:5). They would have been born during the lambing season, the year before. This explains why there were shepherds in the field in the middle of the night. Normally, they would be sleeping, but because it was lambing season—the time when lambs give birth—they were out all night, in case one of the mothers went into labor. 
WOW! What imagery! They are looking for lambs to be birthed, when right under their nose, Miriam was giving birth to the Lamb of God. Jonathan Cahn goes further and teaches that Yeshua was born on Nissan 1. Nissan is the first month of the year, a time for new beginnings. But it would not be a time of pilgrimage or in the dead of the cold, wet winter. Cahn makes the case that every other major event in Yeshua’s life and kingdom coincides with a Jewish feast day:
  • Passover > His death
  • First Fruit Offering is brought  (Lev. 23) > His resurrection
  • Shavuot (Lev. 23) > Birth of the church (Acts 2)
  • Rosh Hashanah > the Second Coming
  • Yom Kippur > End time forgiveness (Zech. 13:1)
  • Feast of Tabernacles > Wedding Supper of the Lamb (Is. 25, Rev. 19, Zech. 14)
So, it makes sense that His birth would also fall on a significant day on the Jewish calendar in the spring with the other prophetic events that point to His first coming. The first of Nissan is 14 days before Passover, which begins between the 14thand 15thday of Nissan. 
Yes, Yeshua, the Passover lamb, may have been born with other lambs just before Passover.
Note: For the first 5 parts, start here: SECRETS SURROUNDING THE BIRTH OF MESSIAH


Shalom from Israel! I am Ron Cantor and this my blog. I am the GODTV Israel Regional Director host of the daily TV program, "Out of Zion". I also serve on the leadership team of a Hebrew-speaking, Spirit-filled congregation in Tel Aviv. We love Yeshua and we love Israel. Hope to see you here soon!

Secrets Surrounding the Messiah's Birth - Ron Cantor MESSIAH'S MANDATE



I AM SO EXCITED!!!

I have been studying the Birth of Yeshua and it is fascinating. Over the past few years at this time, I get drawn into the story of Yeshua's birth. This year it exploded and sent me on a journey. There are so many myths and hidden truths, like:

  • The prophecy to Ruth!
  • To true identity of the Shepherds and the Tower of the Flock!
  • There was no innkeeper that rejected the pregnant couple!
  • The mystery of the Passover Lambs!

There are seven short blogs and I trust that it will make you fall in love with Yeshua all over again! It did with me. If you do celebrate Christmas, then this would be a great read to your whole family Christmas Eve or morning.

Ron Cantor
Get Encouraged in Hebrew!
Below is a 90 second clip from our new meeting, Nes v'CafeI am teaching in Hebrew, but we have added subtitles so you can understand. Watch and then pray that God will use this new outreach to bring many to Yeshua! We want to produce more and more media in Hebrew to reach Israelis via the Internet.
Messiahs Mandate | PO Box 535788Grand Prairie, TX 75053


Shalom from Israel! I am Ron Cantor and this my blog. I am the GODTV Israel Regional Director host of the daily TV program, "Out of Zion". I also serve on the leadership team of a Hebrew-speaking, Spirit-filled congregation in Tel Aviv. We love Yeshua and we love Israel. Hope to see you here soon!

Friday, December 14, 2018

My story of overcoming rejection! - Ron Cantor MESSIAH'S MANDATE


A pregnant woman was shot by a terrorist, and while her baby survived a few days, he succumbed to his wounds yesterday. Also yesterday, two young soldiers were killed by Islamic fanatics.

Dec. 13, 2018


What a sad week in Israel. A pregnant woman was shot by a terrorist, and while her baby survived a few days, he succumbed to his wounds yesterday. Also yesterday, two young soldiers were killed by Islamic fanatics. Below is a picture of the baby, wrapped in a prayer shawl, before being buried and the two soldiers— who had their whole lives ahead of them. Thank you for your prayers.

Ron Cantor
Your Israel Connection is a weekly news magazine about the nation of Israel hosted by Ron Cantor.
Last week I wrote an open letter to Lauren Daigle. So far it has been read more than 100,000 times! The fellow who interviewed her, Dominick Nati emailed me with a press release defending the way he interviewed her. Here is my response. Warning, I am not as nice to him as I was to Lauren.
I suffered horribly from rejection as a young man. So much so that it turned my relationship with God into a hamster wheel of trying to please him day after day...and failing. Can I share with you how He set me free?
Messiahs Mandate | PO Box 535788Grand Prairie, TX 75053